So, coronavirus...
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With 570k doses in England yesterday, supposedly just under 700k UK, 'quiet' month really proving not so quiet as the late March mild hysteria over re second dose needs and India's export restrictions warranted.
Wonder if those restrictions will be dropped to deliver second 5mm consignment, presume unlikely, and if UK will ever have supplies to hit 1mm daily jab mark before not needed and rollout sites wind down. Perhaps if Novavax comes through. Though Pfizer really appears to be opening the taps for Q2 production, but imagine they will prioritise other first time clients if meeting UK orders.
Wonder if those restrictions will be dropped to deliver second 5mm consignment, presume unlikely, and if UK will ever have supplies to hit 1mm daily jab mark before not needed and rollout sites wind down. Perhaps if Novavax comes through. Though Pfizer really appears to be opening the taps for Q2 production, but imagine they will prioritise other first time clients if meeting UK orders.
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Remind us why Biffer they indefinitely suspended their AZ rollout - do you think the Danish authorities are ignoring reports and potential affects of other vaccines?Biffer wrote: ↑Fri Apr 16, 2021 2:30 pm Seems that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines also cause blood clots
https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expe ... influenza/
Come on Denmark, ban them.
Will the UK change its Pfizer/Moderna guidance tomorrow? Is the JCVI stupid for provisionally changing its guidance on AZ, and its explanation for provisionally changing AZ guidance is nothing more than complete and utter jibberish?
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I recall reading a bit of both, that the subsidised production also took place under emergency authorisation to do so and that as such certain legal indemnities reside with the federal government, so that in addition to the Trump general executive order (not rescinded) production in the US is reversed for US unless presidential approval for export given, but then there is also legal work in transferring legal matters to the importing country for the "for US doses".Saint wrote: ↑Sat Apr 17, 2021 5:06 pmTo the best of my knowledge, over two thirds of US production from AZ has been contracted to countries other than US (primarily Canada and Mexico). The trouble is that AZ can't even send what they're contracted to to either country without a Presidential signature, because some of the production capability in the US was funded under there Defense Procurement Act. There's 30 million plus doses sat in the US that wont last forever. 4 million odd were released to Canada and Mexico last month under a reciprocal agreement that said they would be replace, but even that caused issues internally in the US. There's a very real chance that the majority of what has alreay been produced will be allowed to go to waste.
Needs some brave work by Biden with political capital he either doesn't have, or more likely, doesn't care enough (yet) to acquire.
Ironically in between the international AZ reviews, incidents like the reported 15mm J&J doses ruined "because of parallel AZ production", and its stellar Pfizer and Moderna roll-out, these 'negative' incidents may have a beneficial impact of making a potential export of AZ doses easier.
Somewhat annoying how bloody good the Americans can be when they set their minds on it.
Similar to what Biffer postedTheNatalShark wrote: ↑Sun Apr 18, 2021 1:43 pmRemind us why Biffer they indefinitely suspended their AZ rollout - do you think the Danish authorities are ignoring reports and potential affects of other vaccines?Biffer wrote: ↑Fri Apr 16, 2021 2:30 pm Seems that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines also cause blood clots
https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expe ... influenza/
Come on Denmark, ban them.
Will the UK change its Pfizer/Moderna guidance tomorrow? Is the JCVI stupid for provisionally changing its guidance on AZ, and its explanation for provisionally changing AZ guidance is nothing more than complete and utter jibberish?
Comparison of clotting between Vaccines.
Info from Oxford Uni
https://osf.io/a9jdq/
Huge difference in PVT with those vaccinated with Pfizer/Moderna, something like 30 times higher than OAZ
Care to say what the JCVI stance is. Let's avoid the back and forth. People are offered an alternative (they don't have to accept an alternative) to AZ if it's available. So JCVI stance is give them AZ, it's fine, but if it helps uptake, offer something else.TheNatalShark wrote: ↑Sun Apr 18, 2021 1:43 pmRemind us why Biffer they indefinitely suspended their AZ rollout - do you think the Danish authorities are ignoring reports and potential affects of other vaccines?Biffer wrote: ↑Fri Apr 16, 2021 2:30 pm Seems that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines also cause blood clots
https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expe ... influenza/
Come on Denmark, ban them.
Will the UK change its Pfizer/Moderna guidance tomorrow? Is the JCVI stupid for provisionally changing its guidance on AZ, and its explanation for provisionally changing AZ guidance is nothing more than complete and utter jibberish?
Denmark suspended AZ because their case numbers are currently so low they can afford to be extremely picky. I hope it doesn't come back to bite them though, as if they get another wave, they could have had a significant number of people vaccinated if they hadn't changed stances.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
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I've nothing to add or subtract from that.Raggs wrote: ↑Sun Apr 18, 2021 3:48 pm Care to say what the JCVI stance is. Let's avoid the back and forth. People are offered an alternative (they don't have to accept an alternative) to AZ if it's available. So JCVI stance is give them AZ, it's fine, but if it helps uptake, offer something else.
Denmark suspended AZ because their case numbers are currently so low they can afford to be extremely picky. I hope it doesn't come back to bite them though, as if they get another wave, they could have had a significant number of people vaccinated if they hadn't changed stances.
Understanding why they actually take decisions, understanding that they undertake them in their believed best interest of their pops and are irrefutably more qualified to do so than us is important. Rather than some assumption, inference or accusation that they are doing it as part of some crusade against a particular vaccine or nation 'of origin', because of our own made up reasons.
Re concern yes they've said, explicitly, if there was evidence or risk of infection numbers rising that they would consider resuming AZ rollout. As it is they already traded away so much of its AZ orders for Pfizer jabs last year that this decision won't have that material an impact on rollout, particularly given actual numbers being delivered.
Local pub gardens round this way looked like Twickenham High Street establishments 90 minutes before an England Test. NO WAY was anyone worried about social distancing and pub landlords were gleefully making up for lost time.
Spike will be inevitable and if we get locked down again....
Spike will be inevitable and if we get locked down again....
We know we're going to get more cases it's whether we get more deaths, it's a game of chicken. Drove past local hipster/artisanal brewery place on Friday afternoon, gorgeous sun and it was heaving. Nightingale hospital has been packed up.Sandstorm wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 8:45 am Local pub gardens round this way looked like Twickenham High Street establishments 90 minutes before an England Test. NO WAY was anyone worried about social distancing and pub landlords were gleefully making up for lost time.
Spike will be inevitable and if we get locked down again....
Outdoors is much better. I was looking at the Worldometers web site by state, and it’s obvious that the southern states are overall doing much better than the northern ones as far as new cases are concerned, despite generally having few restrictions. I put it down to being outdoors.
Christ alone knows
In the meantime just 4 deaths reported for yesterday, 10.15 people double dosed, nearly 33 million with at least one dose
But you also sit indoors with the aircon going. Once the temp gets high, people in S States will meet inside again.Fangle wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 2:40 pm Outdoors is much better. I was looking at the Worldometers web site by state, and it’s obvious that the southern states are overall doing much better than the northern ones as far as new cases are concerned, despite generally having few restrictions. I put it down to being outdoors.
Hopefully a majority will be vaccinated by then. Only a third of Georgians have had their first jabs and a fifth their second. There is a struggle to get it done. Greater supply than appointments.Sandstorm wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 3:29 pmBut you also sit indoors with the aircon going. Once the temp gets high, people in S States will meet inside again.Fangle wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 2:40 pm Outdoors is much better. I was looking at the Worldometers web site by state, and it’s obvious that the southern states are overall doing much better than the northern ones as far as new cases are concerned, despite generally having few restrictions. I put it down to being outdoors.
- Paddington Bear
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No evidence of outdoor transmission from any major public gathering over the last year, can’t see that changingSandstorm wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 8:45 am Local pub gardens round this way looked like Twickenham High Street establishments 90 minutes before an England Test. NO WAY was anyone worried about social distancing and pub landlords were gleefully making up for lost time.
Spike will be inevitable and if we get locked down again....
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
At some point the key metric of daily cases needs to replaced with those in hospital as outcomes move towards non-fatality. Then daily cases become irrelevant to an extent.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 4:57 pmNo evidence of outdoor transmission from any major public gathering over the last year, can’t see that changingSandstorm wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 8:45 am Local pub gardens round this way looked like Twickenham High Street establishments 90 minutes before an England Test. NO WAY was anyone worried about social distancing and pub landlords were gleefully making up for lost time.
Spike will be inevitable and if we get locked down again....
shaggy wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 6:47 pmAt some point the key metric of daily cases needs to replaced with those in hospital as outcomes move towards non-fatality. Then daily cases become irrelevant to an extent.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 4:57 pmNo evidence of outdoor transmission from any major public gathering over the last year, can’t see that changingSandstorm wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 8:45 am Local pub gardens round this way looked like Twickenham High Street establishments 90 minutes before an England Test. NO WAY was anyone worried about social distancing and pub landlords were gleefully making up for lost time.
Spike will be inevitable and if we get locked down again....
Published on the gov dashboard daily:
Patients admitted
Patients in hospital
Patients on ventilation
Tests conducted
Tests conducted by type
Tests conducted by pillar
Positive tests by date of test
Positives tests by date reported
7 day case rate
Deaths within 28 days
Deaths with Covid on death certificate
It's taken us 12 months, but we're now reporting damned near every stat that might be used as a metric in a single, easily accessible, location. We;re even posting deaths in two ways - date of certificate vs date reported.
True, but decisions on control measures will need to be far more clearly based on the extremis to ensure the general public are kept on board. Numbers almost however big mean little in the future when people are not ending up in hospital. This is a good outcome.Saint wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 6:56 pmshaggy wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 6:47 pmAt some point the key metric of daily cases needs to replaced with those in hospital as outcomes move towards non-fatality. Then daily cases become irrelevant to an extent.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 4:57 pm
No evidence of outdoor transmission from any major public gathering over the last year, can’t see that changing
Published on the gov dashboard daily:
Patients admitted
Patients in hospital
Patients on ventilation
Tests conducted
Tests conducted by type
Tests conducted by pillar
Positive tests by date of test
Positives tests by date reported
7 day case rate
Deaths within 28 days
Deaths with Covid on death certificate
It's taken us 12 months, but we're now reporting damned near every stat that might be used as a metric in a single, easily accessible, location. We;re even posting deaths in two ways - date of certificate vs date reported.
Sounds like a huge waste of money for what is just the flu.Saint wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 6:56 pmshaggy wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 6:47 pmAt some point the key metric of daily cases needs to replaced with those in hospital as outcomes move towards non-fatality. Then daily cases become irrelevant to an extent.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 4:57 pm
No evidence of outdoor transmission from any major public gathering over the last year, can’t see that changing
Published on the gov dashboard daily:
Patients admitted
Patients in hospital
Patients on ventilation
Tests conducted
Tests conducted by type
Tests conducted by pillar
Positive tests by date of test
Positives tests by date reported
7 day case rate
Deaths within 28 days
Deaths with Covid on death certificate
It's taken us 12 months, but we're now reporting damned near every stat that might be used as a metric in a single, easily accessible, location. We;re even posting deaths in two ways - date of certificate vs date reported.
Well it's been a few weeks. https://www.statista.com/statistics/119 ... y-country/
Doses Per 100 people UK 62 France 25.
Hungary and Serbia are doing great though. Though Hungary is using Sputnik and the Sino one. don't know about Serbia.
In the end the telling result between tortoise and hare comparisons isn't how many are vaccinated. It's how many have died since vaccines were available and could take effect. Uk has done really well on that front with its hare approach. Even if we don't succeed with our July target the vaccination strategy has clearly been a success.BnM wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 11:11 pmWell it's been a few weeks. https://www.statista.com/statistics/119 ... y-country/
Doses Per 100 people UK 62 France 25.
Hungary and Serbia are doing great though. Though Hungary is using Sputnik and the Sino one. don't know about Serbia.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
- Insane_Homer
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Be very concerned about flights from India.
Exhibit A - Flight 6395
https://simpleflying.com/vistara-covid-positive-flight/
Exhibit A - Flight 6395
https://simpleflying.com/vistara-covid-positive-flight/
Passengers who are allowed to travel to Hong Kong must have a PCR test within 72 hours of travel. On arrival, they must undergo additional testing and stay in a government-mandated quarantine facility at their own expense for 21 days.
On arrival in Hong Kong, the passengers entered the mandatory quarantine as normal. Six reportedly tested positive at the airport. However, soon after, more passengers began testing positive.
A total of 25 passengers tested positive for COVID to the end of last week. On day 12 of the quarantine period, all travellers were tested again. Incredibly, 22 more passengers tested positive.
This brings the total positive passengers to an astounding 47, the most ever recorded on a flight to Hong Kong. A seat map of positive cases shared online shows a cluster in the middle of the economy section, but also other cases spread throughout the aircraft, even in first class.
“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
- Paddington Bear
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Would really love to understand the logic behind the delay to changing a nation's status on the red list. India isn't the first it has happened to, and I really can't work it out.
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
- Marylandolorian
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This has been the problem since the beginning of the pandemic, WHO are the first one to be blamed.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Tue Apr 20, 2021 9:32 am Would really love to understand the logic behind the delay to changing a nation's status on the red list. India isn't the first it has happened to, and I really can't work it out.
If you live north of the 35 latitude in the Northern Hemisphere as well as south of the 35 in the Southern Hemisphere, these kind of viruses will apparently always be a bit of an issue.Fangle wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 2:40 pm Outdoors is much better. I was looking at the Worldometers web site by state, and it’s obvious that the southern states are overall doing much better than the northern ones as far as new cases are concerned, despite generally having few restrictions. I put it down to being outdoors.
You're saying that it's just the 'flu?Bokkom wrote: ↑Tue Apr 20, 2021 6:45 pmIf you live north of the 35 latitude in the Northern Hemisphere as well as south of the 35 in the Southern Hemisphere, these kind of viruses will apparently always be a bit of an issue.Fangle wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 2:40 pm Outdoors is much better. I was looking at the Worldometers web site by state, and it’s obvious that the southern states are overall doing much better than the northern ones as far as new cases are concerned, despite generally having few restrictions. I put it down to being outdoors.
No different to other influenza viruses?
Before you get indignant and start attacking me for misinterpreting you, that's pretty much what it appears that you are saying. I have family members who are adamant that the whole pandemic is a hoax designed to massage the egos of scientists and politicians and they pretty much express the same opinion.
- FalseBayFC
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The virus is thriving in temperate and tropical Brazil and India.Bokkom wrote: ↑Tue Apr 20, 2021 6:45 pmIf you live north of the 35 latitude in the Northern Hemisphere as well as south of the 35 in the Southern Hemisphere, these kind of viruses will apparently always be a bit of an issue.Fangle wrote: ↑Mon Apr 19, 2021 2:40 pm Outdoors is much better. I was looking at the Worldometers web site by state, and it’s obvious that the southern states are overall doing much better than the northern ones as far as new cases are concerned, despite generally having few restrictions. I put it down to being outdoors.
- mat the expat
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I was supposed to get my first vaccine tomorrow. Cancelled.
Australia has gone from being the lucky country to the useless country
Australia has gone from being the lucky country to the useless country
The FT has done some deeper analysis of India's figures, which make for very sobering reading, in particular their conclusion that all of the official figures are vastly undercounting the real impact, and that daily deaths could be 10X higher than officially reported, ie 17,000 a day rather than 1,700
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India isn't widely vaccinated. If only it would give the SA Government a sense of urgency...
On a lighter note during my team meeting yesterday we talked about offices reopening and what people’s thoughts and fears were of being in an office with other people for the first time in over a year.
All going nicely to plan until the quietest member raised a recent issue after she returned to the office a few weeks ago - the fear of passing wind and no longer just getting away with muting Teams/Zoom (delete as applicable). We all thought she was referring to someone else until she explained further!
All going nicely to plan until the quietest member raised a recent issue after she returned to the office a few weeks ago - the fear of passing wind and no longer just getting away with muting Teams/Zoom (delete as applicable). We all thought she was referring to someone else until she explained further!